Truth Talks
Discussions on today’s relevant issues, discoveries and creative thoughts for Christ Followers.
Truth Talks
Paul’s Radical Freedom
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Paul’s Radical Freedom | Truth Talk Podcast Ep. 4 | How Jesus Breaks the Power of Sin
Are you forgiven… but still struggling with the same sins?
The Apostle Paul reveals that freedom in Christ is more than forgiveness—it is a transformed life. Discover how God breaks the power of sin and leads us into lasting freedom.
Many believers know they have been forgiven—but still wonder why certain struggles refuse to let go.
In this episode of Truth Talk, we explore one of Paul’s most practical and life-changing teachings from Colossians chapter 3. He shows us that spiritual freedom isn’t simply about having our sins forgiven—it’s about allowing Jesus Christ to transform the way we think, live, and love.
Paul begins by calling us to set our hearts and minds on things above, aligning our desires with God’s will before lasting change can begin. From there, he gives a startling command: “Put to death whatever belongs to your earthly nature.”
This isn’t self-improvement.
It isn’t behavior modification.
It is surrender to the transforming work of the Holy Spirit.
Together we’ll examine:
• Why freedom begins with where your heart is set.
• Why your thoughts shape your future.
• The ongoing battle between the Spirit and the flesh.
• Why sin must be put to death—not managed or excused.
• How greed often lies beneath many outward sins.
• Practical ways to starve the flesh and feed the Spirit.
• Why accountability is part of God’s design for lasting freedom.
• The beautiful hope that no chain is too strong for Jesus Christ to break.
If you’ve been battling addiction…
If shame still follows you…
If bitterness, temptation, or hidden sin seems impossible to overcome…
This message is for you.
Jesus doesn’t simply forgive people.
He sets them free.
Our prayer is that this study strengthens your faith, deepens your walk with Christ, and reminds you that the same Savior who forgives also restores.
Trust God. Seek Truth. Walk Deeper.
If this message encouraged you, please Like, Subscribe, and share it with someone who needs hope today.
May God richly bless you as you continue seeking Him.
#TrustGodMinistries #TruthTalk #Colossians3 #FreedomInChrist #JesusSaves
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The Apostle Paul writes about freedom in a way that feels almost violent to modern ears because he suggests that true liberty isn't found in doing whatever we want, but in a radical execution of the things that hold us back. In his letter to the Colossians, he describes a process of alignment and spiritual warfare that challenges the very foundation of how we define personal autonomy today. This tension between the redeemed spirit and the struggling flesh is at the heart of Bruce Lingus's exploration of Paul's teachings, where the central thesis is that freedom is not a passive gift, but an active, disciplined pursuit. When we look at Colossians chapter three, we see Paul acting less like a distant philosopher and more like a high-stakes spiritual trainer who demands a total overhaul of our internal and external habits. The historical context of this letter is vital. Paul was writing to a small community in Colossae, a city in modern day Turkey that was being bombarded by competing philosophies and legalistic requirements. In that environment, Paul's message of freedom through Christ was revolutionary because it bypassed external rituals and went straight for the heart and the mind. It raises the question of whether we actually want freedom or if we've just become comfortable with the weight of our own chains.
SPEAKER_00That idea of being comfortable with our chains is exactly why Paul's language is so jarring. He starts by saying we have to get set, which is a perfect analogy for healing. If you've ever seen a doctor set a broken bone, you know it's a painful, deliberate process of alignment. Without that alignment, the bone heals crooked, and the person is limited for the rest of their life. Paul argues that our hearts and minds are often in that crooked state and they need to be set on things above, as he says in Colossians 3, 1 through 2. This isn't just about thinking happy thoughts or being optimistic. In the original Greek, the word for set implies an intentional orientation of the will. It's an active choice. Bruce Lingus points out that love and affection don't just happen to us, we choose where our heart goes. We often think of our emotions as these uncontrollable weather patterns, but Paul suggests that we have agency over our affections. If we don't intentionally set our hearts on God's truth, they will naturally gravitate toward the immediate, the material, and the temporary. It's a fundamental shift from being a victim of our desires to being a steward of our focus.
SPEAKER_01But isn't there a risk in oversimplifying that? Setting one's mind on things above sounds noble, but we live in a material world with material problems. If someone is struggling to pay rent or dealing with a health crisis, telling them to just focus on things above can sound dismissive or even escapist. How does Paul reconcile the reality of the earthly grind with this command to look upward? It seems like there's a danger of creating a sort of spiritual bypass where we ignore the very real complexities of the human experience in favor of an abstract ideal.
SPEAKER_00It's a fair critique, but Paul isn't advocating for escapism. He's advocating for a change in the lens through which we view those very real problems. Lingus mentions that a massive portion of the world lives on less than $10 a day, yet many of us in wealthier contexts feel more enslaved by our circumstances than they do. The set your mind command is about perspective. If your mind is set on earthly things, then your peace is tied to your bank account, your reputation, or your comfort. When those things shake, and they always do, your internal world collapses. By setting the mind on things above, you're anchoring your identity in something that isn't subject to the volatility of the world. It's about building a foundation that can withstand the storm, rather than trying to pretend the storm isn't happening. Paul himself wrote many of these letters from prison. He wasn't ignoring his chains, he was asserting that his spirit wasn't defined by them. This leads into the second, more aggressive step in Paul's teaching, which is the command to put to death whatever belongs to the earthly nature.
SPEAKER_01The phrase put to death is incredibly strong. He's not saying to manage your flaws or to go to a support group to discuss them indefinitely. He's using the language of execution. In Colossians 3.5, he lists things like sexual immorality, impurity, lust, and greed. It's interesting that he ends that list with greed, calling it idolatry. Why do you think he uses such violent terminology? It feels almost intolerant or extreme in a culture that values self-expression and living your truth. Putting something to death sounds final and uncompromising.
SPEAKER_00It is final, and that's the point. Paul is making a distinction between the penalty of sin and the power of sin. For the believer, the penalty was paid at the cross, but the power of habit and the grip of the flesh remain. Lingus uses the example of Gideon's son from the Old Testament. Gideon tells his son to execute the captured enemy kings, but the boy hesitates because he's afraid. Because he doesn't finish the job, the threat remains. Paul is saying that if you don't kill the sin in your life, it will continue to rule you. We often try to domesticate our vices. We think we can keep our greed or our lust on a leash, but Paul argues that these things are parasitic. They don't want to coexist with your spirit, they want to consume it. The root of many of these issues, as Lingus notes, is greed, an uncontrolled desire for more. It's that internal voice saying, I'm not satisfied. If you don't execute that mindset, it just keeps growing and manifesting in different ways.
SPEAKER_01That connection between greed and the other sins is fascinating. It suggests that all these behaviors are just different symptoms of the same underlying hunger. But let's talk about the how. It's one thing to say, put it to death, but how does a person actually do that in a world designed to feed those very desires? We are constantly bombarded with advertisements and social pressures that encourage greed and lust. If the strategy is just willpower, most people are going to fail. Paul must have had a more robust framework than just try harder.
SPEAKER_00He did, and it involves a two-part process, starving the flesh and feeding the spirit. You can't just create a vacuum in your life. If you just try to stop a bad habit without replacing it with something else, you'll eventually return to it. Lingus emphasizes that what you feed grows and what you starve dies. This is why the set your mind part is so crucial. You have to fill that space with things that are true, noble, and pure, as referenced in Philippians 4. It's a displacement strategy. But there's a third component that is often overlooked in our individualistic culture, accountability. Lingus uses the story of Lazarus to illustrate this. When Jesus raises Lazarus from the dead, he comes out of the tomb alive, but he's still wrapped in grave clothes. He's a living man, but he's still wearing the garments of death. Jesus doesn't tell Lazarus to unwrap himself. He tells the people standing around him to remove the grave clothes. This is a profound insight into how freedom works.
SPEAKER_01That's a powerful image. It suggests that while salvation might be a personal transaction between a person and God, actual freedom, the process of taking off the grave clothes, is a communal act. We aren't meant to unwrap ourselves. This really challenges the modern self-help narrative, where everything is about personal growth and individual grit. It implies that I literally cannot be free without the help of others. But that requires a level of vulnerability and transparency that most people find terrifying. To let someone else see your grave clothes is to admit that you're still carrying around parts of your old dead self.
SPEAKER_00Exactly. And that's where the friction is. We want freedom, but we want to keep our privacy. We want to be whole, but we don't want anyone to see the pieces. Paul's letters were written to communities, not just individuals. He expected the Colossians to be involved in each other's lives, correcting, encouraging, and helping one another put those earthly desires to death. Lingus points out that we need trusted brothers and sisters who will walk with us in both truth and grace. Truth without grace is just condemnation, and grace without truth is just enabling. You need both to actually get those grave clothes off. It's a relational process. This brings us to the ultimate goal of Paul's teaching, transformation. It's not about just following rules, it's about becoming a new kind of human being whose desires have been fundamentally reordered.
SPEAKER_01I want to dig into that idea of the mismatch within. Lingus mentions this tension where the spirit is redeemed, but the flesh still struggles. In theological terms, this is often called the already but not yet. We are already saved, but the full restoration isn't here yet. This seems to be where a lot of people get stuck. They feel like a hypocrite because they have these high spiritual ideals, but still deal with bitterness or addiction. How does Paul's teaching offer hope to someone who feels like they're losing that internal battle every day? If freedom is a pursuit, what do you do when you feel like you're running in place?
SPEAKER_00Paul is very honest about that struggle. Even in his other letters, like Romans, he talks about doing the very things he hates. The hope in Colossians 3 is that our lives are hidden with Christ in God. This means our ultimate security and identity aren't based on our performance in the struggle, but on Christ's finished work. The put-to-death command isn't a way to earn God's love, it's a response to it. When you realize that the penalty is already gone, it changes the motivation for the fight. You aren't fighting for your life, you're fighting because you've already been given a new one. Lingus notes that freedom might not be instant. It's a process that begins with a decisive choice, but it plays out over a lifetime. The someday becomes never warning is important here. Procrastination is the enemy of freedom. Paul is calling for an immediate, even if incremental, movement toward the light.
SPEAKER_01It's interesting that we're talking about death and execution as the path to life. It's a classic Christian paradox. To find your life, you have to lose it. To be truly free, you have to become a slave to righteousness, as Paul puts it elsewhere. This really flies in the face of the secular definition of freedom, which is usually the absence of all constraints. Paul argues that an absence of constraints is actually a form of slavery to our own impulses. If I can't say no to my greed or my anger, am I really free, or am I just a servant to my biology and my environment?
SPEAKER_00That is the ultimate question of the human condition. Modern psychology often aligns with Paul here, suggesting that true flourishing comes from discipline and the ability to delay gratification for a higher purpose. When Paul says to set your heart and mind, he's giving us the cognitive tools to reframe our reality. He's saying that freedom is found in alignment with the way the universe is actually structured, which, in his view, is centered on the character of God. If we try to live against that structure, we'll always feel like we're grinding our gears. Lingus reminds us that God is the restorer of hearts and the healer of minds. The invitation isn't just to a harder life of self-denial, but to a deeper life of purpose and peace that isn't dependent on external circumstances. It's about breaking the chains of bitterness and shame that we've carried for years.
SPEAKER_01And it seems that the starting point is simply acknowledging that the chains exist. We can't put something to death if we're pretending it's a pet. We can't get our bones set if we won't admit they're broken. The invitation to freedom is for everyone carrying addiction, shame, or hidden struggles. It requires a radical honesty that says, I am not okay and I need help to change. Paul provides the theological map, but we have to be willing to walk the path. It's a journey from the tomb of our old selves into a life that is vibrant and unencumbered. The final takeaway is that freedom is available today, but it demands everything of us. It's a high price, but as the history of the faith shows, the cost of staying in the grave clothes is much higher.
SPEAKER_00It really comes down to whether we trust the trainer. Paul, as that spiritual trainer, is pushing us past our comfort zones because he knows what's on the other side. He's seen the transformation in his own life, from a persecutor of the church to its greatest advocate. That kind of radical change is what's on the table for everyone. It starts with setting the mind, moves through the violent work of putting sin to death, and finds its completion in the community of others who are also unwrapping their grave clothes. It's a vision of humanity that is both grounded in reality and soaring in its potential.
SPEAKER_01This framework shifts the focus from what we are losing to what we are gaining. By putting the earthly nature to death, we are making room for the spirit to thrive. It's an exchange of a small, cramped, self-centered life for one that is expansive and connected to the divine. Paul's teachings on freedom are ultimately an invitation to participate in our own liberation, empowered by a grace that has already done the hardest part. If you found this exploration of Paul's perspective on freedom valuable, consider sharing this episode with someone who might be navigating their own path toward transformation.